Excellent Clyde...much respect for your time and effort putting this historic perspective together.
@danielcruz8347 Жыл бұрын
Hallowed Martial arts dojo walls of San Gabriel Valley.. Fortunate to have this presentation!! Peace be too all
@drcharles663 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this documentary. I have made up a new term for you, a martial arts archeologist. I very little about me. I got involved in martial arts back in Sept 1965. I was attending a newly integrated High School in Atlanta. In March of 1966, I purchased my very first Black Belt Magazine. That magazine and countless others lead me to a 56 love affair, which continues to this day. When I came across your video, I thought, "OMG, that's a great idea" I remember reading about karate, and the hub of US karate was southern California. I would live for the monthly mags either in my mailbox or various magazine shops. I would have loved to visit the greater LA area tour the dojos of Karateka that I read about in the mags. I did something similar in NYC, where I was able to visit several dojos in Manhattan. But back to the subject, in the last 50 years, most if not all dojo has closed. If I had the money, I would pay someone to travel to major karate hubs in San Franciso, Dallas, Chicago, NYC, and Washington DC. Etc. and film what is there now I do have some thoughts about Atlanta and Washinton DC. Here in Atlanta, the TDK pioneer was the late Dae Shik Kim. He came to Atlanta to enroll in GA State College(now University) to study P.E around 1963. His first school was on Grandview Ave in Atlanta's Buckhead area, and his final school was on N.Highland Ave. But now that school is long gone. A few years ago, I was in the area, so I drove through the area. I remember the address. The building was there but no karate school at all. BTW Kim seeded many karatekas with a half dozen of his student gained BB status IIRC in 1966, with Joe Corley becoming a national rank point fighting player. He started a karate tourney, "Battle of Atlanta," that started in 1970, that's 50 years old. Plus, he was a major actor in PKA full-contact karate movement and fought Bill Wallace, in 1975, in Wallace's first middleweight title defense. While I was living in Washington DC, 1976, I enrolled at Jhoon Rhee's HQ in 2020 L St downtown; Jhoon Rhee had about 12 schools in the Metro DC area. My daughter and I visited DC in 2012. I looked in the DC yellow pages and noted that only one Jhoon Rhee school was left, in Falls Church, Va. It would be great to have a team of documentation to travel to karate hubs to film would is there now. That would be such a fitting arch of karate's early days to would there now. The one thing besides the time and money is finding the old locations; There are two solutions. The and very doable would to at old BB mag. There was a directory of MA schools in the back of the mag, Also, and while it was a superior karate mag, "Action Karate Magazine" was a mag IIRC produced by Ed Parker as a competitor to BB mag. At the same time, I loved this mag. They're only about 7-8 issues. This was in the late 1960s. There was an even larger school directory. The BB mag is easily accessed online via goggle. There are all issues of BB mag from the early 1960s through 2000. Therefore, the addresses can be obtained, and the "Action Karate" mags seem to be on sale on Amazon and eBay. While all this may be a pipedream, it would a historical document. If anyone needs the URL for the BB mag google back issues, add to the comments, and I can get the URL for you. So Mr. Beck, thank you for this. You have documented just a tiny portion of the history of American karate. Let's hope someone picks this up.
@alexscott7303 жыл бұрын
A little about me....Proceeds to type out his life story
@danielcruz8347 Жыл бұрын
Mr Charles Watts. You are a great wealth of information and ideas!! Thank you for sharing. Peace
@MxStRider2 жыл бұрын
Great Mini Documentary & Footage Clyde. Just came across this clip while surfing KZbin. Didn't know Mr Parker that well. I was one of the Late & Great Mr Trejo's Black Belt student. But I believe I was in the last Belt testing class they had in that Dojo on May 9, 1990. Mr Parker , Mr Trejo, Mr Chavez, Mr Gerard and other Black Belts that I can't remember were there. That Dojo really brought back memories. My time there was from mid 80's to mid 90's. Some people might remember when that very studio burnt down which was trajic But they did rebuild. After Mr Trejo left & I think Nalu took over and most of the regular guys left, the studio lost its luster. I was lucky enough to have taught classes there. Well Clyde I hope you are doing well and Thank You again for the trip down memory lane. Time sure flys looking back in the past.
@cindyzaragoza27365 жыл бұрын
Very cool my buddy Vic leroux of the karate connection is one of the people keeping Ed Parker's Legacy alive
@conniemorris7244Ай бұрын
Thank you for this important history❤
@DerekBailey.5 жыл бұрын
Appreciate you taking the time to capture a part of history!
@DerekBailey.4 жыл бұрын
@EddieVanTuber Yeah he never responds. 🤷🏿
@master-kq3nw11 ай бұрын
👍good video
@levistubbs89495 жыл бұрын
Great stuff Clyde, good information !
@kungfusansootsoilihofuthun88955 жыл бұрын
Much honor to you for sharing this with us
@TomBleecker Жыл бұрын
To clarify, Ed Parker's son, Edmund, is very much involved in the martial arts, having created his own martial art that he calls Paxtial Arts.
@apsondragon5 жыл бұрын
Excellent vídeo!
@ollieroks5 жыл бұрын
Nice! Love the videos.
@kaylenspooner66144 жыл бұрын
You didn't mention Frank Trejo. He ran that studio for years in the 1980,s.
@pinkarate14 жыл бұрын
Hi Kaylen, you must have known Frank. I knew him from Dennis Nackord. Did you ever come to Philly for seminars? Perhaps we met? Poor Frank...we shared many tequila shots together :(
@jkdart19802 жыл бұрын
Hello Clyde. I was wondering if the school on Walnut with the Big Karate sign was the school that Bruce Lee would come to? If so, how did you find out?
@db909904 жыл бұрын
The guy pictured with Bruce Lee was Elvis Presley's bodyguard (Ed Parker)
@GregProbert19715 жыл бұрын
👍
@IS-xk3iq3 жыл бұрын
I believe he learned nunchucks from Sensei Fumioio Demura.
@johncarroll772 Жыл бұрын
Bruce passed away 50 years ago 😢
@leemontoya8028 Жыл бұрын
Kind of weird Elvis doing his Karate! And on the corner there's a drug store!
@benjaminhoover64273 жыл бұрын
Fam
@Johnwick-vv4cj5 жыл бұрын
Did Elvis Presley knew Bruce Lee??
@alexscott7303 жыл бұрын
@EddieVanTuber No he didn't.There's zero documentation showing Bruce Lee with Elvis Presley
@andrewstclaire562 жыл бұрын
Yes Elvis taught Bruce how fight & Bruce taught Elvis how sing
@leemontoya8028 Жыл бұрын
Your a weirdo! let me guess! you Voted for Biden? Weirdo.@@andrewstclaire56